Fear Nothing By Dean R. Koontz

at night. In the low landscape lighting, snails were crossing the

walkway, antennae glistening, leaving silvery trails of slime, some

creeping from the right-hand bed of ice plant to the identical bed on

the left, others laboriously making their way in the opposite

direction, as if these humble mollusks shared humanity’s restlessness

and dissatisfaction with the terms of existence.

I weaved with the bike to avoid the snails, and although Orson sniffed

them in passing, he stepped over them.

From behind us rose the crunching of crushed shells, the squish of

jellied bodies tramped underfoot. Stevenson was stepping on not only

those snails directly in his path but on every hapless gastropod in

sight. Some were dispatched with a quick snap, but he stomped on

others, came down on them with such force that the slap of shoe sole

against concrete rang like a hammer strike.

I didn’t turn to look.

I was afraid of seeing the cruel glee that I remembered too well from

the faces of the young bullies who had tormented me throughout

childhood, before I’d been wise enough and big enough to fight back.

Although that expression was unnerving when a child wore it, the same

look-the beady eyes that seemed perfectly reptilian even without

elliptical pupils, the hate-reddened cheeks, the bloodless lips drawn

back in a sneer from spittle-shined teeth-would be immeasurably more

disturbing on the face of an adult, especially when the adult had a gun

in his hand and wore a badge.

Stevenson’s black-and-white was parked at a red curb thirty feet to the

left of the marina entrance, beyond the reach of the landscape lights,

in deep night shade under the spreading limbs of an enormous Indian

laurel.

I leaned my bike against the trunk of the tree, on which the fog hung

like Spanish moss. At last I turned warily to the chief as he opened

the back door on the passenger side of the patrol car.

Even in the murk, I recognized the expression on his face that I had

dreaded seeing: the hatred, the irrational but unassuageable anger that

makes some human beings more deadly than any other beast on the

planet.

Never before had Stevenson disclosed this malevolent aspect of

himself.

He hadn’t seemed capable of unkindness let alone senseless hatred. If

suddenly he had revealed that he wasn’t the real Lewis Stevenson but an

alien life-form mimicking the chief, I would have believed him.

Gesturing with the gun, Stevenson spoke to Orson: “Get in the car,

fella.”

“He’ll be all right out here , I said.

“Get in,” he urged the dog.

Orson peered suspiciously at the open car door and whined with

distrust.

“He’ll wait here,” I said. “He never runs off.”

“I want him in the car,” Stevenson said icily. “There’s a leash law in

this town, Snow. We never enforce it with You. We always turn our

heads, pretend not to see, because of . . . because a dog is exempted

if he belongs to a disabled person.”

I didn’t antagonize Stevenson by rejecting the term disabled.

Anyway, I was interested less in that one word than in the six words I

was sure he had almost said before catching himself. because of who

your mother was.

“But this time,” he said, “I’m not going to sit here while the damn dog

trots around loose, crapping on the sidewalk, flaunting that he isn’t

on a leash.”

Although I could have noted the contradiction between the fact that the

dog of a disabled person was exempt from the leash law and the

assertion that Orson was flaunting his leashlessness, I remained

silent. I couldn’t win any argument with Stevenson while he was in

this hostile state.

“If he won’t get in the car when I tell him to,” Stevenson said, “You

make him get in.”

I hesitated, searching for a credible alternative to meek

cooperation.

Second by second, our situation seemed more perilous. I’d felt safer

than this when we had been in the blinding fog on the peninsula,

stalked by the troop.

“Get the goddamn dog in the goddamn car now!” Stevenson ordered, and

the venom in this command was so potent that he could have killed

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